Palm Springs paradise

When drummer Matt Sorum left Los Angeles for the desert, he shifted more than locales; his priorities radically changed.
It’s a big deal for a rock star to leave Los Angeles. A drummer for bands like Guns N’ Roses, Velvet Revolver, and the Cult, Matt Sorum had lived there for 40 years — recording, touring, “all that rock ’n’ roll stuff.” But in July 2020, everything changed.
Matt and his wife, fashion designer Adriane (Ace) Harper, were already splitting their time between L.A. and a second home they’d bought in Palm Springs when Ace gave birth to their daughter, Lou Ellington. “As soon as the baby came, it was a complete shift,” Matt says. “We loved L.A., but we didn’t want to raise a family there.”

Matt and Ace sold their home that summer and spent the next five months transforming the Palm Springs ranch — a classic “Desert Modern” in a neighborhood full of iconic mid-century homes — into their ideal family-friendly home. “We decided to get it done while Lou was an infant,” Matt says. “We took everything out and gutted it completely.”

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“I used to feel like if I wasn’t in Hollywood, in the mix, that I’d be out of sight, out of mind. But now my friends come here to write and record music.”
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